Speed, expert care and drugs save the wounded.
Speed, expert care and drugs save the wounded. Official figures for Alllied casualties in France are 30 per cent less than expected and only three out of every 100 wounded men die. Once a casualty is evacuated to a base hospital in Britain, the chances are 269 to one the he will recover. The answer lies in speedy handling of wounds, expert care and modern drugs. First aid men go into battle with Allied soldiers, thus giving them the benefit of constant medical care from within a few minutes of being wounded. Complete surgery tents with teams of sergeins ready night and day, together with supplies of blood plasma and penicillin, are always within an ambulance journey of the front lines. In the field hospital, plasma and drugs are administred to counteract shock and unless a patient has been terribly wounded, his life has been saved by the time he starts the trip to a base hospital. Mass air evacuation is another important development in handling casualties of this war. Thirty per cent of all troops wounded in France have been flown to Britain, saving hours in critical cases where time has meant life. An American soldier receives treatment in the shock tent at an evacuation hospital in Brittany, France, for a compound fracture and wounds from shell fragments which he suffered while fighting near Brest. The surgeon is Major Robert Malach of New York City. Bandaging the patient's leg is Captain Ralph Ferenchak of Plainfield, New Jersey, assisted by Corporal Italo Galacci of Rockford, Illionois. The nurse is Lieutenant Eva Markham of Evansville, Indiana.
- NIOD
- Foto
- 11864
- Amerikaanse strijdkrachten
- Ziekenhuizen
- Medische verzorging
- Gewonden
- Artsen
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